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Probiotics Guide: How to Pick the Right Probiotic- Gut Bacteria Overview | Thomas DeLauer 6 лет назад


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Probiotics Guide: How to Pick the Right Probiotic- Gut Bacteria Overview | Thomas DeLauer

Click Here to Subscribe: http://Bit.ly/ThomasVid Website: http://ThomasDeLauer.com Get my Eating-Out Cheatsheet: https://www.thomasdelauer.com/life-op... Probiotics Guide: How to Pick the Right Probiotic- Gut Bacteria Overview | Thomas DeLauer… I want to give you the breakdown and a study guide to help you understand what probiotics you should really be looking for. It's been a popular question that's been coming up and I want to address it and give you the signs and give you the research, and one of the probiotic strains I'm going to talk about today is the most researched probiotic strain that exists to date. There have been over 1,000 studies backing it up in over 30 years of research. So I'm going to talk about that one and I'm also going to talk about another one that is extremely, extremely popular. Now I'm not talking about brands, I'm talking about strains. This isn't any kind of pitch or anything, this is literally talking about the different strains of probiotic and you can find them on any label. So it's going to help you understand what you should be looking for, but also understanding the general harmony of the gut biome and how it effects our immune system. If you haven't already, go ahead and hit that subscribe button so you can see whenever I post a video or go live, and also make sure you turn on notifications so you never, ever miss a beat when it comes down to this channel. Okay, so let's start with L. rhamnosus. Lol what? Yeah, L. rhamnosus is the most popular, most researched strain of probiotic that is out there, like I said, with over 1,000 studies behind it and over 30 years of research. So L. rhamnosus is a very specific type of lactobacillus, and it's been shown to do a lot of different things within the body, but in order to understand what Lactobacillus rhamnosus does, I want to explain to you a very important cardinal rule, a cardinal educational foundation when it comes down to understanding probiotics and the gut biome in general. It's called competitive adhesion. You see, whenever anything bad passes through your body, we're talking about a mold, we're talking about a pathogen, bad bacteria, whatever, you name it, as it passes through your body and passes through your intestinal track, passes through your digestive system, it has to latch onto a cell before it can ever cause a problem. So, in an unideal world what'll happen is that mold or that pathogen will attach to the cell and then it will trigger macrophages, or white blood cells, to come on and do their trick and do their whole thing, trigger inflammation, and you get sick, you go through the ropes, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Okay, but if we have a situation where a bad pathogen doesn't have the ability to latch on to the cell in the first place, we don't get sick, we don't have an immune response. So how is this possible? Sounds like it's way too good to be true. Well when we have good bacteria in the gut, what ends up happening is these good bacteria will latch on to the cell for us. See what we have to remember is good bacteria is still a foreign bacteria, it's still another living being inside of us as a living being. So although it's supposed to be there, it's kind of not supposed to be there. It's sort of like those birds that sit on top of a rhino or a hippo. It's like they’re not born with those birds on them, they also play a critical role in the survival of the hippo or the rhino. So what ends up happening is the good bacteria latch onto the cell and then occupy the spaces where the bad bacteria normally would try to bind. So that's exactly why, if you have more good bacteria than bad bacteria, you're in a situation where the good bacteria will always prevent bad bacteria from making you sick. So that is exactly why they say that you're immune system starts in your gut, and if you're constantly using hand sanitizers or you're constantly heating foods that destroy your gut bacteria, anyway, I digress, that's going to make it a big problem, right? References: 1) L. rhamnosus - A common probiotic strain - Humarian. (2017, August 26). Retrieved from https://humarian.com/l-rhamnosus-comm... 2) Lactobacillus Rhamnosus Beneficial Bacteria. (2016, December 3). Retrieved from http://www.souleticsresourcecenter.co... 3) Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG, AKA "LGG", Has Many Health Benefits. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.powerofprobiotics.com/Lac... 4) New research sheds light on how popular probiotic benefits the gut. (2018, May 22). Retrieved from https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases... 5) https://www.clinicaleducation.org/wp-... 6) Goldin BR , et al. (n.d.). Survival of Lactobacillus species (strain GG) in human gastrointestinal tract. - PubMed - NCBI. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...

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